指南中的专家意见意味着什么?一项元流行病学研究。

Evidence-Based Medicine Pub Date : 2017-10-01 Epub Date: 2017-09-18 DOI:10.1136/ebmed-2017-110798
Oscar J Ponce, Neri Alvarez-Villalobos, Raj Shah, Khaled Mohammed, Rebecca L Morgan, Shahnaz Sultan, Yngve Falck-Ytter, Larry J Prokop, Philipp Dahm, Reem A Mustafa, Mohammad H Murad
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摘要

指南经常使用术语专家意见(EO)来限定建议。我们试图确定行政长官建议的基本原理和证据类型。我们在多个数据库和网站上搜索了过去十年中发表的使用“EO”一词的当代指南。我们确定了1106篇参考文献,其中包括69篇指南(2390条建议,其中907条符合EO标准)。在大多数(91%)的建议中没有提供使用EO指定的理由。最常被引用的证据类型是从没有回答指南问题的研究中推断出来的(40%来自随机试验,38%来自观察性研究,2%来自病例报告或系列)。从与指南中提到的人群不同的人群中推断出的证据在2.5%的EO建议中被发现。我们认为,5.6%的EO建议可能被贴上良好实践声明的标签。没有一项EO的建议被明确描述为仅仅依赖于专家组的临床经验。在指南中使用EO作为证据水平仍然很普遍。在大多数情况下,没有明确提供这种使用的理由。大多数情况下,标记为EO的证据是间接证据,偶尔是来自病例系列的非常低质量的证据。我们认为,与使用EO标签相反,明确描述证据类型可能会增加清晰度和透明度,并可能最终提高建议的接受度。
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What does expert opinion in guidelines mean? a meta-epidemiological study.

Guidelines often use the term expert opinion (EO) to qualify recommendations. We sought to identify the rationale and evidence type in EO recommendations. We searched multiple databases and websites for contemporary guidelines published in the last decade that used the term EO. We identified 1106 references, of which 69 guidelines were included (2390 recommendations, of which 907 were qualified as EO). A rationale for using EO designation was not provided in most (91%) recommendations. The most commonly cited evidence type was extrapolated from studies that did not answer guideline question (40% from randomised trials, 38% from observational studies and 2% from case reports or series). Evidence extrapolated from populations that were different from those addressed in the guideline was found in 2.5% of EO recommendations. We judged 5.6% of EO recommendations as ones that could have been potentially labelled as good practice statements. None of the EO recommendations were explicitly described as being solely dependent on the clinical experience of the panel. The use of EO as a level of evidence in guidelines remains common. A rationale for such use is not explicitly provided in most instances. Most of the time, evidence labelled as EO was indirect evidence and occasionally was very low-quality evidence derived from case series. We posit that the explicit description of evidence type, as opposed to using the label EO, may add clarity and transparency and may ultimately improve uptake of recommendations.

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